Ebook: The Shadow of Eternity: Belief and Structure in Herbert, Vaughan, and Traherne
Author: Sharon C. Seelig
- Tags: Poetry, Literature & Fiction, British & Irish, European, Regional & Cultural, Poetry, Literature & Fiction, Reference, Almanacs & Yearbooks, Atlases & Maps, Careers, Catalogs & Directories, Consumer Guides, Dictionaries & Thesauruses, Encyclopedias & Subject Guides, English as a Second Language, Etiquette, Foreign Language Study & Reference, Genealogy, Quotations, Survival & Emergency Preparedness, Test Preparation, Words Language & Grammar, Writing Research & Publishing Guides
- Year: 1981
- Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
- Language: English
- pdf
The poetry of Herbert, Vaughan, and Traherne represents "an attempt to shape their lives and verse around the fact of divine presence and influence," writes Sharon Seelig. The relationship between belief and expression in these three metaphysical poets is the subject of this deeply perceptive study.
Each of these poets held to some extent the notion of dual reality, of the world as indicative of a higher reality, but their responses to this tradition vary greatly―from the ongoing struggle between God and the poet of The Temple, which finally transforms the materials of everyday life and worship; to the more difficult unity of Silex Scintillans, with its tension between illumination and resignation; to the ecstatic proclamations of Thomas Traherne, whose sense of divine reality at first seems so strong as to destroy the characteristic metaphysical tension between this world and the next. Seelig's study proceeds from individual poems to the whole work, exploring the relation of cosmology and religious experience to poetic form.
Each of these poets held to some extent the notion of dual reality, of the world as indicative of a higher reality, but their responses to this tradition vary greatly―from the ongoing struggle between God and the poet of The Temple, which finally transforms the materials of everyday life and worship; to the more difficult unity of Silex Scintillans, with its tension between illumination and resignation; to the ecstatic proclamations of Thomas Traherne, whose sense of divine reality at first seems so strong as to destroy the characteristic metaphysical tension between this world and the next. Seelig's study proceeds from individual poems to the whole work, exploring the relation of cosmology and religious experience to poetic form.
Download the book The Shadow of Eternity: Belief and Structure in Herbert, Vaughan, and Traherne for free or read online
Continue reading on any device:
Last viewed books
Related books
{related-news}
Comments (0)